For those of you with too much money and living in Colorado
Posted: September 8, 2011 Filed under: Skiing / Snow Boarding Leave a commentColorado Ski Country USA Gold Passes Now Available
All-Access, Fully Transferable Passes to 21 Colorado Resorts
Denver, Colo. – August 31, 2011 – Colorado Ski Country USA (CSCUSA) today unveiled the 2011-12 Colorado Gold Pass, an exclusive pass that grants access to 21 CSCUSA resorts. This transferable pass, good for unlimited skiing and riding, can be purchased for $3,000.
The versatility of the Gold Pass, which gave last year’s holders access to a 10-month season, makes it the most coveted ski pass in the ski community. The Gold Pass does not have any blackout dates, which means resorts accept the pass every day of the season. Gold Pass holders also enjoy bypassing the ticket line with direct-to-lift access at just about every resort – a feature that any skier or rider appreciates when gearing up for Colorado’s frequent powder days. The unique transferability of the pass allows the owner to share the pass with employees, clients, family and friends, or any other acquaintances, affording all the opportunity to play in Colorado’s backyard for the entire 2011-12 season.
Available in limited quantities, the Gold Pass is the only pass of its kind in Colorado. “This pass is the gold standard of the ski industry,” explains Melanie Mills, president and CEO of Colorado Ski Country USA. “It features everything an individual could want: unlimited skiing, unlimited days, an unlimited roll of individuals with access, and no time constraints. The Gold Pass is the perfect tool for businesses and individuals that not only love taking in Colorado’s fantastic powder themselves, but who want to loan it out to clients and associates as a reward, enticement or valuable perk.”
CSCUSA Colorado Gold Pass purchasers also enjoy the added benefit of an insider’s access point to Colorado’s world-famous ski industry, complete with an invitation to Colorado Ski Country USA’s 49th Annual Meeting.
Members of CSCUSA that are honoring the Colorado Gold Pass for the 2011-12 season include: Arapahoe Basin, Aspen Highlands, Aspen Mountain, Buttermilk, Copper Mountain, Crested Butte, Purgatory at Durango Mountain Resort, Echo Mountain, Eldora, Howelsen Hill, Loveland Ski Area, Monarch Mountain, Powderhorn, Ski Cooper, Snowmass, SolVista Basin, Steamboat, Sunlight Mountain Resort, Telluride, Winter Park and Wolf Creek.
The Colorado Gold Pass is a fixture of the Colorado skiing experience; premiere
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Dealing with an accident, injury or problem is a conflict, when you allow yourself to create one.
Posted: September 7, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThis article has some great ideas on dealing with conflicts and avoiding them.
We have adopted an attitude in the US that anytime someone is injured there is a conflict. If you disagree with this statement why do customers get sent to customer service and injured or upset customers get sent to risk management?
That whole approach is wrong, but for many people that course is set in stone. If you can’t deal with every customer, mad, injured, happy, healthy, or with a broken part of bike equally, at least learn how not to create greater problems.
In the article, No Batteries Required: 8 Conflict Resolution Tips the author refers to a book Beyond Reason: Using Emotions as You Negotiate, Roger Fisher and Daniel Shapiro. The book looks at dealing with the emotions involved in conflicts.
1. Appreciation: Do you feel heard, understood and valued for your point of view?
2. Affiliation: Are you treated as an adversary and kept at a distance, or are you treated as a colleague?
3. Autonomy: Do you have the freedom to make a decision without feeling that someone else is telling you what to do?
4. Status: Do you feel treated with respect, or do you feel diminished?
5. Role: Do you have a fulfilling or meaningful role in your conflict situations or negotiations?
Why are these issues important? Because 80 to 90% of the time, the person on the other side of the conflict is dealing with emotion, not with dollars and sense. We’ve been trained to see any conflict as dollars. However, that is a very rare situation until after we have escalated the conflict to that level or refused to deal with the problems and given the grieved person no other choice.
The article then points out 8 things to do in a conflict situation.
1. Become aware of your role in escalating or de-escalating the conflict
2. Know your conflict resolution style
3. Help people see the logic behind your argument
4. Don’t withhold a necessary apology
5. Let go of your need to always be right
6. Don’t lose sight of the higher purpose
7. Don’t lecture
8. Leave some things unsaid
So what does this mean to you?
It means you can use these ideas to help you stop complaints and maybe stop lawsuits.
I’ve been “talking” and writing about number 4 for decades. Don’t be afraid to apologize. It is a difficult thing to do, but that is what we were trained to do, and consequently, that is what we are trained to expect. Remember the person on the other side of the conflict has emotional issues usually. If you deal with the emotions, you can eliminate many of the monetary issues or at least get them down to a reasonable number.
And saying your sorry does not mean you are liable.
Learn these tips and maybe your corporate life will be better as the article and book suggest, more importantly when dealing with your customers you may resolve more problems and create less lawsuits.
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Shawn White, Olympic Snowboarding Gold Medalists now promoting Vail Resorts
Posted: September 6, 2011 Filed under: Ski Area Leave a commentThe Flying Tomato will promote all Vail Resorts
Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge and Keystone in Colorado and Heavenly and Northstar in California/Nevada will be promoted. Northstar at Lake Tahoe will become his home mountain and primary training resort. At Northstar, White will design a 22’ half pipe.
White will design a special Epic Season Pass to be promoted on Facebook this fall.
This should put Vail resorts in the “big seat” for terrain parks.
See Vail Resorts Taps Shaun White as Spokesman
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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I’m tired of people trying to tell us what we can and cannot do to recreate.
Posted: August 31, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentOn top of that, when we do get hurt we then are supposedly a bigger liability.
See Skydiving Quadriplegic’s Death Raises Questions of Safety for Disabled Thrill Seekers
A Quadriplegic skydiver died when he could not deploy his parachute and it failed to automatically deploy. The article about his death raises the question about whether or not he should be allowed to skydive after his death.
According to video footage and statements from other skydivers, Fogle [deceased] was on his back for much of the 1,200-foot free fall, leading investigators to conclude that his disability prevented him from righting his position and manually deploying his chute.
Prior to his death, the skydiver had completed 125 successful skydives.
In the five years since his certification, Fogle had jumped 125 times without incident. But his death raised questions of whether he should have been allowed to skydive in the first place.
Yet the skydiver knew what he was doing and wanted to live life to the fullest. 125 skydives and someone who does not skydive “knows more” to say to the skydiver, you can’t do that anymore because it is not safe.
“Live to the point of tears,” is listed as one of Fogle’s favorite quotes on Facebook. The other: “Remember, Zack, if you can’t be safe, be spectacular.”
Do not sit back and expert the problem to go away. The problem is getting worse.
A man is restricted to a life very different from what we learn to expect and then people, who have no business sticking their nose in, decided to tell someone what they can and cannot do.
The article also pointed out that disabled athletes are turned away from many activities because the managers/owners/businesses consider them a greater liability.
If I am confined to a wheelchair, why can’t I decide how I am going to live? For that matter, how I’m going to die.
Stand up for everyone’s right to recreation. Don’t let anyone make rules that restrict your right or anyone’s right to recreate the way we want. There is always a balance between the land and the ability to recreate without destroying the land, but hockey rinks, airplanes and soccer fields do not need restrictions.
When you see articles like this, leave comments and write letters to the editor saying you have the right to recreate and so should everyone. Copy your state and federal representatives to let them know how you feel. It is a sad state of affairs, but to go out and have fun, you also have to become politically involved and voice your concerns.
Recreate and stand up for everyone to recreate.
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I think a Boy Scout fell of a ropes course and is suing because of it.
Posted: August 30, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentBut it is really hard to tell from the article.
See Boy Scouts Sued Over 30-Foot Fall At Skymont Reservation
Here are the facts from the article.
Tyler and two other Scouts were participating in a vertical climb activity. While competing against one another, they would “strap on appropriate gear and climb a rope that is affixed to an adjoining cable approximately 30 feet in the air which runs over and through a cable and pulley system.”
The suit says Tyler had climbed to the top of the rope near the junction of the pulley and the cable when a staff member assisting with the competition “began to run out of rope.”
The complaint says, “The rope was not secured in any fashion, therefore, the staff member belayer was unable to safely negotiate Tyler from the top of the rope and instead Tyler fell thereby sustaining injury.”
I’m guessing that the scouts were on a ropes course, other than that I’m not sure what happened. It could be the lawyer did not understand and wrote the complaint this way or it could be the reporter did not understand. I suspect the lawyer did not understand.
Either way, $3.5 million is a lot of money for injuries that someone lived through who is not in a will chair.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Another lawsuit over drowning in low head dam.
Posted: August 30, 2011 Filed under: Rivers and Waterways 5 CommentsYou sometimes think there is some force that draws canoes or canoeists to low head dams. More so when you canoe at night without a PFD!
The mother of the deceased is suing the Town of Rocky Mount, Virginia for $5.3 million and $350,000 in punitive damages. The lawsuit is based on the fact the town new the dam was dangerous and did not fix it.
If you remember several previous articles on land owner liability, the liability of the landowner to a trespasser is minimal. (See Instructional Colorado decision Negligence, Negligence Per Se and Premises Liability and Land Owner of cycling track not liable for those dangers you can see.) In this case, the plaintiff will have to overcome the issue of being a trespasser and whether the town is protected by any premises liability.
Don’t get me wrong, low head dams need to be removed. They are death traps. At the same time, I’ve reported on two fatalities now by canoeists canoeing at night. (See Lawsuit over low head dam drowning against city of Topeka Kansas). This fatality the deceased was without a life preserver (PFD). If you paddle at night you better have a skill set and equipment far above “let’s rent a boat for a few hours.” I’ve paddled all over the world, many times at night, once in the Amazon jungle. However I always knew about the risks, the course, and except for boa’s in the trees and Cayman’s in the water, I knew what was ahead of me.
Lawsuits don’t change the world. The dam in question here has already been fixed to alleviate some of the dangers. The lawsuit is not going to change anything. The dam is in place to support the city water supply. What is the lawsuit going to do?
So
Work with the ACA and/or the AWA to remove or fix low head dams. Don’t go paddling unless you know where you are going. Don’t go hear a low head dam.
See Dead Woman’s Estate Sues Rocky Mount
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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If you provide a bike in CT you don’t have to provide a helmet
Posted: August 29, 2011 Filed under: Cycling Leave a commentHerbst et al. v. The Guilford Yacht Club Association, Inc. et al., 2009 Conn. Super. LEXIS 765
However, if I were providing, renting or demoing bicycles I would make helmets available if a retailer. A bike sharing program is different.
In this case the plaintiff borrowed a bicycle from the defendant yacht club. The plaintiff crashed and sued the yacht club for allowing her to use a defective bicycle and for providing a bicycle without a helmet.
The lawsuit is a little different than I ordinary review because of the type of motion that was filed that created the decision. This was a motion to strike. A motion to strike says that specific paragraphs of the plaintiff’s claim fail to make the minimum allegations or cannot be proved no matter what and therefore should be stricken from the complaint.
The plaintiff sued for “negligence for failure to inspect, maintain, house, and test the defective bicycle, failure to warn that the bike was unsafe, and failure to provide the plaintiff with a helmet or access to helmets.” The defendant filed this motion to strike the complaints over whether there could be liability for failure to provide a helmet.
The court agreed with the defendant and struck the claims of the plaintiff alleging negligence in failing to provide a helmet.
So? Summary of the case
The court looked to see if any Connecticut statute or court had created a duty to provide a helmet with a bicycle. Connecticut had a statute that required persons under the age of sixteen to wear helmets when riding bikes, but not adults. The court found that because there was no statute or duty an adult was “fully capable of rationalizing the risks of riding a bicycle with or without a helmet, and may choose to act accordingly.”
The court further reasoned that if the plaintiff was concerned about not having a helmet she could have not ridden the bicycle.
So Now What?
This is a great case to support bike sharing programs or businesses that provide bicycles as a service, for free and for no benefit to themselves to guests. There may be a different decision if you are renting the bicycle. If you are renting the bicycle or providing the bicycle with the intention to make money (demo rides) you might make helmets available. Whether or not a person decides to ride with a helmet is their choice.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Herbst et al. v. The Guilford Yatch Club Association, Inc. et al., 2009 Conn. Super. LEXIS 765
Posted: August 29, 2011 Filed under: Assumption of the Risk, Connecticut, Cycling, Legal Case | Tags: bicycle, biking, contributory negligence, Cycling, Duty to Wear a Helmet, helmet, malicious, Reckless, Wanton, Yacht Club Leave a commentHerbst et al. v. The Guilford Yatch Club Association, Inc. et al., 2009 Conn. Super. LEXIS 765
Sharon Herbst et al. v. The Guilford Yatch Club Association, Inc. et al.
NNHCV085022625S
SUPERIOR COURT OF CONNECTICUT, JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF NEW HAVEN AT NEW HAVEN
2009 Conn. Super. LEXIS 765
March 30, 2009, Decided
March 31, 2009, Filed
NOTICE: THIS DECISION IS UNREPORTED AND MAY BE SUBJECT TO FURTHER APPELLATE REVIEW. COUNSEL IS CAUTIONED TO MAKE AN INDEPENDENT DETERMINATION OF THE STATUS OF THIS CASE.
JUDGES: [*1] John F. Cronan, J.
OPINION BY: John F. Cronan
OPINION
FACTS
This personal injury action was commenced on August 14, 2008, by plaintiff Sharon Herbst, via service of writ, summons and complaint on the agents for service of defendants Guilford Yacht Club Association, Inc. and Unit Owners Association at Guilford Yacht Club, Inc. The plaintiff alleges that she suffered serious injuries when, as a business invitee of the defendants, she was thrown off of a malfunctioning bicycle owned and maintained by the defendants.
The plaintiff’s ten-count complaint alleges five counts against each defendant, with counts six through ten re-alleging the facts and claims in counts one through five. Counts one and six allege negligence for failure to inspect, maintain, house, and test the defective bicycle, failure to warn that the bike was unsafe, and failure to provide the plaintiff with a helmet or access to helmets. Counts two and seven allege loss of consortium on the part of Richard Herbst, husband of plaintiff Sharon Herbst. 1 Counts three and eight allege recklessness for the same acts or omissions described in counts one and six. Counts four and nine allege Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA) 2 violations [*2] on the ground that the defendants advertised free use of bicycles to increase business from transient club members while failing to take steps to ensure that the bicycles were safe for use, thus violating Connecticut public policy by placing profits ahead of safety and causing substantial injury to consumers and/or providing the defendant with an unfair advantage over competing marinas. Counts five and ten allege spoliation of evidence on the ground that the defendants repaired the bicycle in question while aware of the impending action.
1 Although Richard Herbst is a plaintiff in this action, the claims central to this motion solely involve Sharon Herbst and therefore the court will refer to her as “the plaintiff” for purposes of this decision.
2 Although the plaintiff fails to allege the violation of a particular statute in her complaint, both parties make arguments referring to the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act, General Statutes §42-110a et seq., therefore the court will address their arguments under that statute.
On November 28, 2008, the defendants filed a motion to strike (# 117) paragraphs 12(e) and 12(f) of counts one and six, and counts three, four, eight and nine entirely. [*3] The defendants filed a memorandum of law in support (# 118). The plaintiff filed an objection to the motion to strike (# 120) and corresponding memorandum of law in opposition (# 121) on December 11, 2008. The parties presented oral arguments to the court on January 12, 2009.
DISCUSSION
[HN1] “The purpose of a motion to strike is to contest . . . the legal sufficiency of the allegations of any complaint . . . to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Fort Trumbull Conservancy, LLC v. Alves, 262 Conn. 480, 498, 815 A.2d 1188 (2003). “A motion to strike challenges the legal sufficiency of a pleading, and, consequently, requires no factual findings by the trial court.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Bernhard-Thomas Building Systems, LLC v. Dunican, 286 Conn. 548, 552, 944 A.2d 329 (2008). “[I]n determining the sufficiency of a complaint challenged by a defendant’s motion to strike, all well-pleaded facts and those facts necessarily implied from the allegations are taken as admitted.” Violano v. Fernandez, 280 Conn. 310, 318, 907 A.2d 1188 (2006).
Counts One and Six
The defendants move to strike paragraphs 12(e) and (f) of counts one and six. These [*4] two paragraphs allege that the defendants negligently caused the plaintiff’s injuries “in that the defendant did not provide the plaintiff with a bicycle helmet when they could and should have done so” and “in that the defendant failed to make bike helmets visible and/or readily assessable [sic] to business invitees.” The defendants argue that “there exists no legal duty on the part of the defendants to provide and/or make available a bicycle helmet to an adult.” (Motion to Strike, p. 5.) The plaintiff responds that the defendant cannot move to strike only certain portions of a count, but rather only a count as a whole, and that, even if the court were to examine the merits of the defendants’ arguments, the plaintiff sufficiently pleaded a claim for common-law negligence on the ground that the defendants failed to maintain safe premises for business invitees by offering bicycles to visiting boaters without providing helmets. (Memorandum in Opposition, pp. 4-5.)
[HN2] “‘Although there is a split of [opinion], most trial courts follow the rule that a single paragraph of a pleading is subject to a motion to strike only when it attempts to set forth all of the essential allegations of a cause [*5] of action or defense . . . [O]nly an entire count of a counterclaim or an entire special defense can be subject to a motion to strike, unless the individual paragraph embodies an entire cause of action or defense . . . Prior to the 1978 Practice Book revision, a motion to strike . . . individual portions or paragraphs of a count did not lie if the count as a whole stated a cause of action . . . Arguably under the present rules, a motion to strike may properly lie with respect to an individual paragraph in a count . . . However, the weight of [opinion] in the Superior Court is that the motion does not lie, except possibly where the subject paragraph attempts to state a cause of action.’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Trimachi v. Workers’ Compensation Commission, Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven, Docket No. CV 97 0403037 (June 14, 2000, Devlin, J.) (27 Conn. L. Rptr. 681, 2000 Conn. Super. LEXIS 1548).” Wright v. 860 Main, LLC, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. CV 06 5007079, (May 21, 2007, Tanzer, J.) (43 Conn. L. Rptr. 458).
The plaintiff alleges the breach of a variety of duties under its general claim of negligence in counts one and six. The plaintiff’s [*6] claims relating to the defendants’ alleged failure to provide bicycle helmets identifies a purported duty that may be properly recognized as a claim entirely distinct from the alleged duties pertaining to the maintenance of the bicycle. As such, this is an instance where it is appropriate to review the legal sufficiency of the identified individual paragraphs via a motion to strike.
The claims in paragraphs 12(e) and (f) of counts one and six are not legally sufficient to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and therefore the court grants the defendant’s motion to strike those paragraphs. The plaintiffs claim that the defendants had a common-law duty to provide bicycle helmets to adults finds no support in Connecticut law. The only bicycle helmet statute in Connecticut, General Statutes §14-286d, requires protective headgear solely for children under the age of sixteen. 3 The plaintiff is older than sixteen and therefore the requirements of §14-286d are inapplicable.
3 The relevant portions of §14-286d state: [HN3] “(b) No child fifteen years of age or under shall operate a bicycle on the traveled portion of any highway unless such child is wearing protective headgear which conforms [*7] to the minimum specifications established by the American National Standards Institute or the Snell Memorial Foundation’s Standard for Protective Headgear for Use in Bicycling. Failure to comply with this section shall not be a violation or an offense. Failure to wear protective headgear as required by this subsection shall not be considered to be contributory negligence on the part of the parent or the child nor shall such failure be admissible in any civil action . . . (d) A person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of renting bicycles shall provide a bicycle helmet conforming to the minimum specifications established by the American National Standards Institute or the Snell Memorial Foundation’s Standard for Protective Headgear for Use in Bicycling to any person under sixteen years of age who will operate the bicycle if such person does not have a helmet in his possession. A fee may be charged for the helmet rental. Violation of any of the provisions of this subsection shall be an infraction.”
[HN4] “The existence of a duty is a question of law and only if such a duty is found to exist does the trier of fact then determine whether the defendant violated that duty in the particular [*8] situation at hand . . . [T]he test for the existence of a legal duty of care entails (1) a determination of whether an ordinary person in the defendant’s position, knowing what the defendant knew or should have known, would anticipate that harm of the general nature of that suffered was likely to result, and (2) a determination, on the basis of a public policy analysis, of whether the defendant’s responsibility for its negligent conduct should extend to the particular consequences or particular plaintiff in the case . . . The first part of the test invokes the question of foreseeability, and the second part invokes the question of policy . . . [W]e are not required to address the first prong as to foreseeability if we determine, based on the public policy prong, that no duty of care existed.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Neuhaus v. Decholnoky, 280 Conn. 190, 217-18, 905 A.2d 1135 (2006).
The plaintiff has not identified any prior Connecticut court that recognizes the duty of a bicycle purveyor to provide a helmet to a would-be cyclist over the age of sixteen. Several superior court decisions have addressed the related question of whether there exists a duty [*9] to wear a bicycle helmet in the context of a special defense of contributory negligence. The court in Dubicki v. Auster, Superior Court, judicial district of New London at Norwich, Docket No. 107712 (March 8, 1996, Hendel, J.) (16 Conn. L. Rptr. 301, 1996 Conn. Super. LEXIS 671), considered the question of “whether an adult bicycle rider can be considered contributorily negligent for his or her failure to wear a bicycle helmet while riding his or her bicycle.” The court noted that the language of §14-286d, “as well as a review of the legislative history . . . reveals that the statute was primarily designed to encourage the use of headgear by children” and that “[t]here is no similar statute for adults.” Id., 302, 1996 Conn. Super. LEXIS 671. The court concluded that “[t]here being no statutory duty imposed on an adult rider to wear [a helmet], there can be no contributory negligence for an adult rider’s failure to do so.” Id.
In an analogous case, the court in Ruth v. Poggie, Superior Court, judicial district of Tolland at Rockville, Docket No. CV 93 52750 (November 22, 1993, Klaczak, J.) [10 Conn. L. Rptr. 412, 1993 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3090], concluded that an injured motorcyclist could not be found contributorily negligent for failing to wear a helmet because “there is [*10] no duty, statutory or otherwise, for motorcycle operators in Connecticut to take the safety precaution to wear a protective helmet. Thus . . . it cannot be said that the failure to wear a motorcycle helmet amounts to negligence on the party of the rider.”
As this court agrees with those decisions holding that an adult cyclist does not have a duty to wear a helmet, and further observes that the legislature clearly decided to limit any such duty to children under the age of sixteen, this court now holds that a bicycle purveyor is under no duty to provide an adult bicyclist with a helmet. The practical reason for drawing this line is self-evident: an adult is fully capable of rationalizing the risks of riding a bicycle with or without a helmet, and may choose to act accordingly. The legislature’s policy of allowing each individual adult to choose whether to use a helmet is exemplified by the age cap on the protective headgear requirement for bicyclists in §14-286d as well as the legislature’s repeal of the so-called “motorcycle helmet law” in 1976. See General Statutes (Rev. to 1975) §14-289e; Ruth v. Poggie, supra, Superior Court, Docket No. CV 93 52750. As illustrated in this case, if [*11] the plaintiff was concerned about her lack of a helmet, she could have chosen not to ride the bicycle. The defendants did not owe the plaintiff a duty to provide a bicycle helmet and the court therefore grants the defendants’ motion to strike paragraphs 12(e) and (f) of counts one and six.
Counts Three and Eight
The defendants move to strike counts three and eight on the ground that the plaintiff has “failed to plead facts alleging malicious, wanton and/or reckless conduct on the part of the defendants” and “merely reiterate the claims made in the negligence counts.” (Motion to Strike, p. 9.) The plaintiff responds that “the specific facts alleged in the case at bar are sufficient to satisfy the elements necessary to support a claim for reckless conduct so as to survive a motion to strike.” (Memorandum in Opposition, p. 6.) The court agrees with the plaintiff and denies the defendants’ motion to strike counts three and eight.
[HN5] “Recklessness is a state of consciousness with reference to the consequences of one’s acts . . . It is more than negligence, more than gross negligence . . . The state of mind amounting to recklessness may be inferred from conduct. But, in order to infer it, there [*12] must be something more than a failure to exercise a reasonable degree of watchfulness to avoid danger to others or to take reasonable precautions to avoid injury to them . . . [S]uch aggravated negligence must be more than any mere mistake resulting from inexperience, excitement, or confusion, and more than mere thoughtlessness or inadvertence, or simply inattention . . . Although there is a difference between negligence and a reckless disregard of the rights or safety of others, a complaint is not deficient so long as it utilizes language explicit enough to inform the court and opposing counsel that both negligence and reckless misconduct are being asserted.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Craig v. Driscoll, 262 Conn. 312, 342-43, 813 A.2d 1003 (2003).
The plaintiff utilizes language explicit enough to inform the court and the defendants that both negligence and reckless misconduct are being asserted. Furthermore, the plaintiff has alleged facts that, viewed in the light most favorable to sustaining the claim and treated as admitted for purposes of deciding this motion, support a claim for recklessness. The plaintiff’s detailed allegations regarding the purchase, [*13] maintenance and inspection of the bicycle are sufficient to sustain a claim of recklessness. The defendants’ motion to strike counts three and eight is therefore denied.
Counts Four and Nine
The defendants move to strike comas four and nine on the ground that the plaintiff’s CUTPA claims are legally insufficient because “(1) the alleged wrongful act was not conducted in the course of the defendant’s primary line of business; and (2) the plaintiffs cannot establish that Sharon Herbst suffered an ‘ascertainable loss’ as required by General Statutes §42-110g(a).” (Motion to Strike, pp. 14-15.) The plaintiff argues that she has established a prima facie CUTPA claim because she alleges in the complaint that the defendants operate a full service recreational facility that includes the advertising and provision of bicycles to increase business at the expense of competitors and that the solicitation of cycling business while providing unsafe bicycles offends public policy. (Memorandum in Opposition, pp. 10-11.) The plaintiff also argues that her personal injuries are an ascertainable loss recoverable in a claim for a CUTPA violation. Id. The defendants’ arguments rely on questions of fact not [*14] properly addressed at this juncture and therefore the court denies the motion to strike counts four and nine.
[HN6] “It is well settled that whether a defendant’s acts constitute . . . deceptive or unfair trade practices under CUTPA, is a question of fact for the trier . . . To establish a CUTPA violation, a claimant’s evidence must establish that the conduct at issue falls within one of three criteria. A court must decide whether the conduct (1) offends public policy, (2) is immoral, unethical, oppressive or unscrupulous or (3) causes substantial injury to consumers, competitors or other businessmen . . . Whether the defendant is subject to CUTPA is a question of law, not fact.” McCann Real Equities Series XXII, LLC v. David McDermott Chevrolet, Inc., 93 Conn.App. 486, 520-21, 890 A.2d 140 (2006). “[A] CUTPA violation may not be alleged for activities that are incidental to an entity’s primary trade or commerce.” Id., 523. “[T]he touchstone for a legally sufficient CUTPA claim is the implication that the acts complained of have ‘an entrepreneurial or business aspect.'” Simms v. Candela, 45 Conn. Supp. 267, 273, 711 A.2d 778 (1998) [21 Conn. L. Rptr. 479], quoting Haynes v. Yale-New Haven Hospital, 243 Conn. 17, 38, 699 A.2d 964 (1997).
Without [*15] evidence from either party, and accepting the facts as alleged in the complaint as true for purposes of resolving this motion, the court cannot say definitively that cycling is not a component of the defendants’ primary line of business. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant operated and managed a commercial boating marina but also repeatedly alleges that bicycling was a component of that operation. The court is unwilling to draw adverse factual inferences that the bicycling business was merely incidental to the marina business without additional facts not properly presented in a motion to strike. As such, the court cannot strike counts four and nine on this ground.
Similarly, the plaintiff alleges a variety of losses including those for physical injuries, medical care, lost wages, and the loss of enjoyment of life, and alleges that her damages resulted in part because of the defendants’ alleged CUTPA violations. Both parties acknowledge that there is a split of opinion in the superior court regarding whether damages for personal injuries may be recoverable under CUTPA. See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Westland Properties, Inc., Superior Court, judicial district of Ansonia-Milford at Milford, [*16] Docket No. CV 02 077228 (March 17, 2004, Upson, J.) (36 Conn. L. Rptr. 702, 2004 Conn. Super. LEXIS 615) (“[d]espite CUTPA’s broad language and remedial purpose, the plaintiff’s alleged [slip and fall] injuries do not satisfy the distinction alluded to in Haynes because they are personal, rather than economic”); Simms v. Candela, supra, 45 Conn.Sup. 274 (“[the plaintiff], like most personal injury plaintiffs, alleges that he has suffered economic losses, including medical expenses and lost wages, as a result of his fall. Assuming this allegation to be true, he is a ‘person who suffers [an] ascertainable loss of money’ “). Although the plaintiff’s claims may appear to be only tenuously derived from the defendants’ “entrepreneurial or business aspect”; see Haynes v. Yale-New Haven Hospital, supra, 243 Conn. 32-35; the plaintiff has adequately pleaded conduct and damages that could potentially be construed as ascertainable losses derived from a violation of CUTPA. The “issue as to whether this loss resulted from the CUTPA violation complained of . . . is a factual issue appropriately left to the judge or jury hearing the case.” Simms v. Candela, supra, 45 Conn.Sup. 274. The court therefore denies the defendants’ [*17] motion to strike counts four and nine.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court grants the defendants’ motion to strike paragraphs 12(e) and 12(f) of counts one and six, and denies the motion to strike counts three, four, eight and nine.
The Court
Cronan, J.
Lawsuit over low head dam drowning against city of Topeka Kansas
Posted: August 25, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentMen who drowned were canoeing on the river at 11:00 PM at night. Complaint says the sign was not lit.
Low head dams are killing machines, almost perfect killing machines. If you go over a low head dam you are going to die. If you are out canoeing at night in the dark, you are going to die because you won’t see the low head dam, you won’t see any signage about the dam and you won’t see anything that might kill you.
Sure the city did not comply with an agreement with the Army Corp of Engineers, but what has that got to do with the low head dam…at NIGHT. Could the canoeists see the take out, they could not see the sign.
No one lights signs. In the ocean buoys may have lights on them but none of the signs are lit.
It’s sad when someone dies like this, that sadness will not be erased by a lawsuit based on stupid facts.
See Drowning lawsuit proceeding set
What do you think? Leave a comment.
Copyright 2011 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law, Recreaton.Law@Gmail.com
© 2011 James H. Moss
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Commercial Paddlesports Fatalities 2011 as of 8/15/11
Posted: August 24, 2011 Filed under: Paddlesports Leave a comment| This list is not guaranteed to be accurate. The information is found from web searches and news dispatches. If you have a source for information on any fatality please leave a comment. If this information is incorrect or incomplete please let me know. Thanks. |
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I’ve heard unconfirmed rumors of additional fatalities in Westwater Canyon and Browns canyon if anyone has any information please email me: recreation.law@gmail.com
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Instructional Colorado decision Negligence, Negligence Per Se and Premises Liability
Posted: August 22, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Adventure travel, Colorado, Negligence per se, Outdoor recreation Leave a commentLombard v. Colorado Outdoor Education Center, Inc., 2011 Colo. App. LEXIS 1401
Court also insinuates that the case was brought to recover worker’s compensation benefits.
This suit was brought by a school teacher who was injured when she attended a training session. She had climbed into a loft to read and was injured when she climbed down. Because she was “working” at the time she received worker’s compensation benefits for her injuries.
The teacher was classified as a “business invitee” acting within the scope of her employment. She was there at the request or to do business with the land owner.
The suit was brought by the injured teacher and her school district. The school district would not have suffered any actionable loss, unless it was self-insured and/or acting under a subrogation clause in a worker’s compensation policy.
Summary of the case
The court started its discussion of the case comparing negligence per se and premises liability. Premise’s liability is defined as the duty owed by a land owner, or a person responsible for the land, such as a tenant, to someone coming upon their land. There are three types of invitees to land: trespasser, licensee and invitee. A trespasser is there without the consent and/or knowledge of the land owner. A License has permission to be on the land, but is not on the land for the benefit of the land owner. The duty of care is minimal with the trespasser and grows with the licensee and is the greatest with an invitee.
The court first started with the negligence side of the discussion. The court defined negligence under Colorado law as:
Negligence is the failure to do an act a reasonably careful person would do, or the doing of an act which a reasonably careful person would not do, under the same or similar circumstances to protect oneself or others from bodily injury.
A person bringing a negligence claim must establish a duty, a breach of that duty, causation, and damages.
The court then defined Negligence Per Se under Colorado law:
Negligence per se is a common law doctrine which provides that legislative enactments, such as statutes and ordinances, can prescribe the standard of conduct of a reasonable person, or duty, such that a violation of the statute or ordinance constitutes a breach of duty of care. Lombard, 187 P.3d at 573. A plaintiff may recover under a negligence per se theory if he or she can establish that the defendant violated the statutory standard of care, that the statutory standard of care was intended to protect against the injuries sustained, and that the violation was the proximate cause of the injuries sustained. Id. Negligence per se, therefore, serves to conclusively establish the defendant’s breach of a legally cognizable duty owed to the plaintiff. Id.
Negligence per se used to be used to prove premise’s liability actions. However, that is no longer possible under Colorado law. Now a premise’s liability action must be proven according to the Colorado statute.
The plaintiff attempted to prove that the land owner/camp should have known that the ladder was dangerous, and therefore, they owed a duty to the plaintiff to either inform her of the danger or fix the ladder so it was not dangerous.
The jury found that although the plaintiff had been injured, there was no proof, the ladder was a dangerous situation that should have been fixed prior to the plaintiff entering upon the land. The plaintiff and the school district lost its case.
So Now What?
No one brought up the issue of assumption of the risk. By climbing up the ladder to read, she obviously assumed the risk of climbing down? However, assumption of the risk may not be a defense to a premise’s liability claim?
When you own or operate on land (and if you don’t I want to know what you do because water, rivers and lakes from a liability standpoint are land….) you owe the highest duty to people you invite to come on the land for your benefit. An easier way to define that is you owe the highest degree of care t your customers, guests and clients.
The issue then becomes when the law or code surrounding a building or structure has changed, and the building has not. An example would be fire code. Building’s built in the 60’s did not need smoke alarms, fire alarms, etc. Now days you must. It is difficult to determine what you must do, should do and don’t need to do.
However, there are a couple of things to do to keep you knowledgeably with issues.
· Every couple of years, invite a contractor or architect out to look at your structure. Do not ask for a written report, just take notes on what you should or must fix.
· Always fix any item that is a safety issue. Any law that was passed to keep people safe should be dealt with to keep your guests safe.
· Always make sure your buildings meet OSHA requirements. You may not need to have a railing that meets OSHA requirements for your guests but if your employees are on the deck, then you must. See OSHA issues $12,000 in fines for Ski Patrollers death to ski area.
· If you are dealing with minors/children, fix everything all the time.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Friday: Great articles with great ideas for businesses
Posted: August 19, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentI read a lot of stuff every day. I thought I would share some today.
5 Things To Know About The ADA
How To Recover From A Social Media PR Disaster
7 Tips For Beating Fear And Becoming A Stellar Public Speaker
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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New York jumps into paddler’s rights case on side of paddlers!
Posted: August 18, 2011 Filed under: Paddlesports 5 CommentsIt’s nice to see a state attorney general decided to do what is good for the people rather than what will get them sound bites!
This suit concerns a canoeist who paddled a waterway between two lakes. The land on either side of the waterway was owned by one landowner and when the canoeist went through the waterway they sued him for trespass.
For more information on the general facts of the case see Brandreth president talks paddling rights.
The state has now been granted permission to intervene in the suit representing the rights of the state of New York and consequently it’s people. This should bring a boost to the defense and help open up waterways in New York for recreation.
See State can side with editor in canoe case
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Be Prepared now days means prepared to save a life and deal with the post-accident mess
Posted: August 17, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentParents both congratulate and condemn BSA
A Scout was struck and killed by a lightening at a camp. His friend and fellow scout as well as an adult leader are being called heroes in their attempts to save his life. However after that point the response and dealings with the family seemed to have been botched or ignored.
The article quotes the following issues that occurred after the youth had died and the family had been called. “Rayborn” is the deceased scout’s father.
“We are very upset and frustrated with all the miscommunications, beginning at the time when we got the first phone call that David had been struck by lightning,” Rayborn said in a public statement Saturday.
Rayborn said his family was told to meet the medical helicopter at the hospital, only to learn once there that their son was not on the flight because he had not survived.
Then, they had to wait 32 hours before they knew where David was or where he was being taken, Rayborn said.
So? So don’t be this stupid!
Knowing first aid and CPR is not enough now days. Your emergency plan should not list everything you should do, you won’t follow it anyway. It should list who should do what. The training should follow that specifically says you don’t do anything unless you know specifically what is going on. Here miscommunications left the parents of a dead youth waiting 32 hours to find out where their son’s body was.
A lot of people screwed up. How could you have the body of a minor on your hands and not expect family members to arrive quickly.
How could you not communicate with the family when the plans changed?
How could you not call and say your son is not on the helicopter.
How could you not send someone to the family to assist them in their time of need?
An adult and a youth are heroes in an attempt to save a life. However, after those things were messed up according to this article.
See Families of two Scouts struck by lightning express frustration over their ordeal.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Survey of UK physicians shows them against mandatory bicycle helmet laws.
Posted: August 16, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentReasons for their attitude very, however 2/3s do not support a mandatory law.
See: Doctors Against Helmet Laws
The survey was conducted by the British Medical Journal. The reasons given by the physicians as reported include:
· the research on helmets reducing the risk of head injury is too inconclusive to support a new law
· Bath study showing drivers drive closer to helmeted cyclists.
· Helmets would reduce interest in cycling which is a healthy activity
I found several of their reasons interesting. The most important one is that cycling as an activity is better for the greater part of the population as a fitness activity than the issue of head injuries in cycling.
So?
Wear a helmet. But don’t kill cycling by making it a law.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Maine follows the majority and does not allow a parent to sign away a minor’s right to sue.
Posted: August 15, 2011 Filed under: Minors, Youth, Children, Release (pre-injury contract not to sue) | Tags: Adventure travel, American Ski Company, Children, JimMoss, MAINE, Minor, Outdoor recreation, Parental Responsibility, Parental Rights, Rock climbing, Ski Resort, United States Leave a commentRice, Et Als, vs. American Skiing Company, Et Als, 2000 Me. Super. LEXIS 90
However the court held out the possibility that a
properly written indemnification clause may
be upheld.
In Rice et all the plaintiff was a nine year old boy skiing at Sunday River Ski Area. Sunday River Skiway Corporation was owned by the now defunct
American Ski Company at the time. The mother of the plaintiff signed the plaintiff up for an all-day ski lesson. While doing so she signed a “Acknowledgement &; Acceptance of Risks & Liability Release” (Ski Enrollment Form)” The form stated the risks and released the defendant of liability for negligence. The form also contained an indemnification provisions which stated the parents would indemnify the ski area for any losses of the minor.
During the afternoon instruction the plaintiff fell. The class stopped and waited for him to catch up. The plaintiff lost control and skied into the tree suffering injuries. The plaintiff sued for negligent supervision. The defendants claimed the defenses of the Maine Skiers’ and Tramway Passengers’ Responsibilities Act, 32 M.R.S.A. § 15217 (Supp. 1999) and the release signed by the mother.
The court quickly found the Maine Ski Act did not stop the lawsuit. The Maine Ski Act allows a suit for “does not prevent the maintenance of an action against the ski area operator for the negligent operation of the ski area”. The court found that negligent supervision “clearly” falls within the Maine Ski Acts “negligent operation” exclusion.
The court then looked at the release and struck the normal cords discussing releases. The court looks with disfavor on releases, releases must be strictly construed, and they must spell out with greatest particularity the intention of the parties.
After reviewing Zivich v. Mentor Soccer Club, Inc., 82 Ohio St. 3d 367, 696 N.E.2d 201 (Ohio 1998), the court held that Zivich only applied to non-profit organizations and in one-half of a sentence dismissed the issue that a parent is constitutionally allowed to sign a release for a child. The court then looked at prior law in Maine and held that a parent could not sign away a minor’s right to sue in Maine.
The court then looked at the mother’s claim for lost wages. The mother’s claim is derivative of the son’s claims. That means that if the son’s claim does not prevail then the mother’s claim does not stand. Because there were no defenses to the son’s claim then the mother’s claim could go forward.
Whether a parent can recover for their own losses when a child is negligently injured varies from state to state.
The final defense reviewed by the court was the indemnification language in the release. Maine, like all other states disfavors indemnification clauses against a defendant’s own negligence. The court found that this clause was not sufficient to state a defense under Maine law. However the court did not deny indemnifications claims absolutely. A release or indemnification agreement written with the guidelines of the court may be upheld.
So? Summary of the case
Maine fell in with the majority of the states holding that a parent could not sign away a minor’s right to sue. Nothing knew there. However there were several other defenses that were not raised or maybe were raised at later times.
The mother enrolled the plaintiff in a level III class. That required the plaintiff to have experience and be able to “form a wedge, to be able to stop and start and to get up on their own if they fall and they can put their skis on by themselves and that they have experience riding the chairlift.” A minor can assume the risk of injury. Whether or not a nine year minor can I do not know. The specific age were a minor can assume a risk varies by state and by age. However, the plaintiff did have experience skiing and as such might have assumed the risk.
Another outside claim might be that the mother was a fault for signing here son up for a class that was beyond his abilities. Maybe the minor should have been enrolled in a Level 1 or 2 class. However, this claim would be subject to the claim that the instructor should have moved the child if the child was in the wrong class by lunch. This argument may hold if the accident occurred in the morning before the ski instructor had the opportunity to review the student.
The court also brought up and pointed out that the father had not signed any of the documentation. Not a legal point, but an interesting one in this case.
So Now What?
1. Get the best most well written release you can that specifically stops lawsuits by parents.
2. Educate the minor in advance, and probably the parents so you might have an assumption of the risk defense.
3. Be very wary with kids. If it appears that the minor cannot ski with the rest of the class, either move the minor to another class or move the class to a slope the minor can handle.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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Outdoor Retailer Trade Show
Posted: August 1, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentSorry but the travels continue. I’m going to be at the Outdoor Retailer Tradeshow this week.
FREE Military-Extension Adventure Camps in 2011!
Posted: July 29, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized 1 CommentThe University of Kentucky Family and Consumer Sciences Extension is offering free camps open to military parents and their teenage children ages 14-18 only from any state and from any branch of the military. This includes Active Duty, Reserve, and National Guard families. Priority will go to military parents/children who are geographically dispersed and who have experienced at least one deployment. These FREE camps are:
June 20-24: White Water Rafting
Oakhill, West Virginia, Near Eastern KY Space for up to 26 participants (14 Service Members, 14 teenage children)
June 30-July 3: Canoeing/Coastal Camping
Land between the Lakes, West KY Space for up to 20 participants (10 Service Members, 10 teenage children)
July 29-31: The Red River Gorge Backpacking & Canoeing Experience
Daniel Boone National Forest, Southeast KY
Space for up to 18 participants (9 Service Members, 9 teenage children)
August 12-14: Wilderness Survival
Big Bone Lick, State Park, Northern KY Space for up to 20 participants (10 Service Members, 10 teenage children)
September 16-18: Challenge Course/Corn Maze
Life Adventure Center, Central KY
Space for up to 50 participants (25 Service Members, 25 teenage children)
October 6-9: Backpacking 101 & Green River Paddle
Scan this QR code with your smart phone to go directly to the website!
Mammoth Cave National Park, Southwest KY
Space for up to 20 participants (10 Service Members, 10 teenage children)
December 2-4: Cold Weather Camping
Lake Cumberland, Southern KY Space for up to 20 participants (10 Service Members, 10 teenage children)
Military parents and their teenage children will enjoy a one-of-a-kind camping experience while connecting and spending quality time together! Registration packets for each camp are available on our website, http://www.ca.uky.edu/hes/fcs/militarycamp/. For more information about Military-Extension Adventure Camps, contact Lauren Smith, Military-Extension Adventure Camp Coordinator, lauren.w.smith@uky.edu, (859) 257-3072.
Pro Challenge VIP passes on sale
Posted: July 29, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a comment
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There is a reason why we don’t keep bears as pets. There Dangerous!
Posted: July 21, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized 1 CommentUtah court awards $1.9 million to family of boy killed by a bear.
1. It is always sad when anyone is killed, more so when it is a child.
2. $1.9 million is a lot of money for the loss of a child.
3. The money was awarded because the family did not know the bear was dangerous? Give me a break!
Supposedly the judge awarded the amount because “U.S. Forest Service was required to warn the family that a dangerous animal was on the loose in canyon.”
The dangerous bear had supposedly ripped open a cooler earlier in the day. HAS NO ONE IN UTAH EVER SEEN YOGI BEAR? Either the movie or the cartoon show. Bears get into coolers, picnic baskets and cars if there is food in side.
Of course there was the obligatory statement that the parents did this so it would not happen to anyone else. It is going to happen to anyone who takes their kid camping in bear country and puts the kid in a tent with a granola bar wrapper and an open Coke Zero can. That is just baiting the bear!
Please appeal this decision and get it in front of someone who has been to a zoo or at least outdoors.
What do you think? Leave a comment.
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When did journalism turn from telling a good factual story to trying to place blame for an accident?
Posted: July 20, 2011 Filed under: Challenge or Ropes Course Leave a commentArticle about a student falling from a ropes course is nothing but innuendo littered with a few facts.
A student fell 30’ on a school ropes course. The harness came undone or failed. The article does not identify the reason why the harness failed. The student broke his back, left wrist and arm and bruised a kidney when he landed. He will be wearing a brace for three months after the accident.
Now you’ve read the facts of the case.
The article then probes the following issues:
Whether the student signed a permission slip
Whether the mother signed a permission slip
How much training the student had
How much training the teachers had
Where the teachers received their training
Whether protocols were followed that day
Why there was no net or padding under the ropes course
Who built the ropes course, which then created a serious of “it’s not our fault quotes.”
The fact the ropes course is now closed
Eventually the issue gets back to the fact the mother wants the school to pay the students medical bills.
I wonder if the mother came up with this idea or the journalist righting the article.
Actually, it reminded me more of a plaintiff’s complaint than journalist.
When in doubt, keep your mouth shut!
This is a great example of trying to save your neck by sinking your ship. Every single thing that was reported was done in a way that made every one look bad.
Why give a reporter the opportunity?
First everyone interviewed felt they were smart enough to deal with a journalist. You aren’t. A journalist has been trained to make you look bad. None of the people interviewed were trained to make themselves or the school look good. One person, the ropes course builder had obviously been trained in making others look bad to make yourself look good.
Do what you do best and leave law and PR to experts.
Second, why answer questions you don’t know the answers too? It only makes you look, stupid at best and covering stuff probably. Just say I don’t know. If you sit in a desk in an office looking at a staff of dozens, what do you know about the operation of the ropes course? Either you trust your staff and have them run the course or you don’t. Don’t try and guess what they did and why. It only makes you look bad and makes the school look worse.
This does not mean you should hide under the desk. Hire someone to deal with the situation.
Remember that I don’t know is an honest answer. You can say I am the grand pooba of the organization and I have a staff of XX, X of whom run the ropes course. We are investigating the accident and when we learn more we’ll let you know. Right now, we’ve been dealing with the injured child and I have not had time to review what happened.
See Zipline victim: ‘Training fell short’
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RECALL: 375,000 Petzl Climbing Lanyards
Posted: July 19, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentRECALL: 375,000 Petzl Climbing Lanyards
Petzl America of Clearfield, UT has voluntarily recalled about 375,000 Scorpio and Absorbica Shock Absorbing lanyards worldwide, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Some lanyards are missing a safety stitch on the attachment loop, which can cause the lanyard to disconnect from the climbing harness, posing a fall hazard to consumers. One fall has occurred in France.
This recall affects all Scorpio and Absorbica lanyards manufactured before May 2011 and sold by authorized Petzl dealers nationwide and in Canada from January 2002 through May 2011 for $75 to $220. The lanyards were manufactured in France.
Affected Scorpio lanyards manufactured between 2002 and 2005 are model numbers L60 and L60 CK. These are yellow and blue, Y-shaped lanyards with yellow stitching on both ends. They are connected by a metal O-ring to one end of a blue pouch which contains the tear-webbing shock absorber. The pouch has a tag on it with the word “PETZL” in white letters. The other end of the blue pouch has a blue and yellow webbing attachment loop that connects to the climbing harness. Affected Scorpio lanyards manufactured between 2005 and 2011 are model numbers L60 2, L60 2CK, L60 H, L60 WL. These are red, Y-shaped lanyards connected by a black metal O-ring to one end of a grey zippered pouch which contains the tear-webbing shock absorber. The other end of the pouch has a black webbing attachment loop that connects to the climber’s harness.
Absorbica comes in several models with varying lanyard configurations and several different connector options. Affected model numbers are L70150 I, L70150 IM, L70150 Y, L70150 YM, L57, L58, L58 MGO, L59, and L59 MGO. The lanyards have a black zippered pouch with yellow trim and the Petzl logo on the side. All have a common tear-webbing shock absorber accessible through the zippered pouch. This zippered pouch has a connector attachment on one end. The other end can have a connector attachment, a single lanyard or a Y-shaped lanyard. All lanyard options are constructed of black nylon webbing or rope and have either a connector attachment point or a snap hook connector sewn directly to the lanyard.
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On Vacation
Posted: July 18, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentOn the Green River for a week. I’ll be back next week.
CAEE’s Annual Summer BarbEEque
Posted: July 15, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentAugust 11, 2011 ~ 4:00-7:00 pm
at the CAEE office in Golden, CO
Please RSVP to CAEE by August 5th:
by phone at 303-273-9527 or Click here to RSVP online.
The CAEE annual summer BBQ is our small way of saying a big THANK YOU for all your involvement in supporting CAEE and environmental education in Colorado! We’ll provide the BBQ (meat and veggie),
plus all the fixin’s, sides, and beverages!
You can help create more involvement in CAEE by bringing a friend or co-worker to the BBQ. It’s a great time for discovering the EE network, meeting other environmental educators, exchanging news, and/or finding out what’s happening in EE.
Please make the effort and help spread the word – the more the merrier!
Directions to CAEE
15260 S. Golden Rd
Phone: 303-273-9527
** Taking I-70 – get off at the W. Colfax Exit. Head west on Colfax. Go Right on McIntyre (at Planet Honda). Take McIntyre till end then go right on to Golden Rd. Travel about ¼ mile. When there is a break in the chain link fence on your right, turn right and go straight through the stone pillars, then go left. CAEE is the 2nd stone house on the left (behind the tank and cannon). Those coming from north of Denver can take I-76 west to I-70.
** Taking 6th Ave. – get off at the Indiana Exit. Head north through traffic light and under I-70. The road takes a sharp curve to the left and becomes Golden Rd. Head west about ¼ mile. On your left you will see a tank and cannon parked in the grass, take the next immediate left into Camp George West. Go straight between the stone pillars, then go left. CAEE is the 2nd stone house on the left (behind the
tank and cannon).



